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rmon and wor nd o nd magazines BoHant tiat wo shorld tako 1y counterct these wro Atur N - | congre v ot PASSING JESTS, iy DALY B b Wi \ ) ore to o INNVERSAL report v in favo, ninet hardly more 1 schome was contemplated public entiment was not long in pronouncing nore it, Tt was plain iR that no 8 ne to fnvolve the gov s tor o | | A ny Kin ind O 1500, 20,180 | of the t 1 o are | t W pate in the s and There forduly \ wd Trade ' Uy have tho s i imposing hron 3 i s Helen Hunt's + | rress, aud thereforeit is wo Thanet’s romances. | the committ is seareely anything more to add | circumstance hus not b soviously considor . e | comp . The | homage to fietion, Of | since it has gave sples: foe | city, It "ho fi > > devotion have be b, 8L |y wou : y il who | Sl of youth . count Notary Publ bra f v v cunts in the var ) ence of that wor 1 t o Adds to the Population. 1 « 1 I and better than the Saturday Bk, and f g v f g ' 1 w of the Ams that is THE SUNDAY By & i . Tt : v ivth to twins, THERYE is only one thing i 1 Ty, We pre 1 way of explanation 140,000, way plat Nows is the acco hundr ko evE s both branches of thousar ¢ 1 I s o of the unwilling pres LOEFLLY -v'-'w: postma have resignod in the last " Tt m to the union has more than just car 1 St A b b S TR v two weeks, 1 the hopes of her p v, It can bos 5,000, 000, B o % Wratinee 5 : S8 B BRI BE It AM 1o wonders of the age must \ 3 ] 8 seription v ich of h of raska sine be recorded the fact that two Nebraska t 3 i e shown at o glance by compaving the | The will next boin order f to I1 18 stated that ror has been e om- | popular vote in 1856 and in 1500, Wesley founded i teste " nd the old worlc nd that is | ConETes to pre t people fromcontracting \g to rise, like u purple haze | 1P liZinett 4 . ipped he cpared to g the | ulation in the v h Lol him that while not ow aflernoon, the recon Cool Sortof Blafr, shop and bacomo . el vote pol n 1890 it 1o man in the history of iie A Washineton state jadgze Is about to be joined in Brusse L mysterious womam. My wonare about all that is left of the frothy Boulangists Varitoido ¢ win . Thus | there were no acen at ough mastery ol o position you think yo allife of the south. The of an e “Then | think we —_— Tl el e ntToy o 11851, 1; s ereat, | work attemptod s much publish nd magazin well asthe ey diti) b L oie! partiality for the game of faro. The attor- i ey, who is ting the defense before L perience is that those who go from the | braska’s growth in of statehood, | spiritual est state of thorough na- Per 5 m“ ”l- S asiibivte ';“ x” | SEiomialveon s school to the shop generally make more I'he incerease of population in the last [ justme m' L n such possibilities, The new west has | seut talisin, wholly at varissee with [ he'sa writer of stories progress than those who star lecades makes o marvelous ex- ohn Wesley was d 3= | had a history unlike that of ‘THE lobbyists have beon ordeved off y paratively little trouble in the matter of | This extraordinar suse in the pop- | few mistakoes. When the time camo for | eollegos and sehools, can do much to do- the floor of the house at Lincoln. Now | {1\ qnetion to his superior, and the ex- | mlar vote tells in a word the story of Ne- | him to desist from his lubors he left his let somebody order them off the grounds. psno lund is naturally Their sorvices ave not needed this year. P : iy other western ideas, THERE is no reason in the world why e S American Grocer : 2 el lbhe e i A Haven't the Nerve, vers close, isn't he A trade among journeymen withot y | Census of 1560 3 s 1 s of learning and at a yaure en= | more cosmopolitan than either the cast Detroit #ree Press, low that can be. He's previous instruction labors under t % A8 2203 | tered the sorvi \rlish church th well off the shop. As a rule the lad who govs to f strong and even prosperity quired extraordinary pro all | part of the world, Its population is confodorate veterans should not attend the world ir in a body, provided thoy don’t forget to cheer for the union and otherwise behave themselves thaiy to show him cven the simplest things, o) ; = and the emplover or foreman ravely hus disndv S nenare not disposed & PRode L 53542 | He was on v group of |the oo Blide cities have sprung from (he'|cavalry tactics, sy galloped forward | ried,ch? What's your wi din actual ed wnd routed by f 1 States . notubte churchmen, among thom the | fig quves teathfully represent the | P distinguished George Whitelield wilderr almos! 1 magic. BY A typographical error the news re- friend and co-labos who, bocau N e e L RRLE 1o | development of the state from the time ports have stated that “the vacancy | OV Ve o spare fon fiis i ORI o jts settlement. It has been a story of | their mothodieal 1i ol 4 > § b most cases the matter of starting in w HOA ALl ) sk DU caused by Vandervoort's resignation has unbroken progress. Undoubtedly state- been filled.” There is no vacancy. It mo from pover clsewhere to lead lives : ior-e sl i B H infantry Lord made aredskin to tight | ‘ cennengtoss S o te-| formance of religious tutics, were e A e It hin iront 7 The youth who has had the advantage : 2t visively called “*Mothodists.” In 1735 usal of the two volt f pione - bis bair int was the vacancy that resigned. S beads BUhobl avolds this aenatienss | togrowtl which it ever vecelved. Untll [ vy AR b Ao e Tt heanian s T EaB AR A o T Tho old apprenticaship that was achicved no large town eoulc doing missionnry work am % Aserdeen (5. Dy X with certain » have been but 1 ke It 18 very lute in the day to talk about - ; G ol of n e superiluous employes in this legislature, bor and ¢ 1 1 The hope of reform in legislative ex- | MevVer bere L yal conditions beyon ‘ i L penses has hoen referred (o the twenty- | demand - for second session, which meets in 1893, branches of in that becomes ov teado is & discouraging undertaking o 3 histor 1novelist. of the Missouri were uncor : . : 5 y : : . ! he day suraly s when tl tain and for the most paet unteied. The 11 have aliterature as unigu TnE president hus sottled the Boston | 110 #ro they to he secured? Sl At Sl postmastership at last by rejecting all the applicants with fervid recommonda- tions and appointing a man that nobody asked for. Ho Isaman perfectly com- continue to depond - on Kuropo for | YAUED Wliderness, prolificonly fn A 1 v- | country, but how much lon uote on his return I and buttalo, Omaha was on the outer e adl) rmons Ca Sal Lake Trit ntemporary stegests that the gontiles propriety and expediency ) should ¢ 1t the possivility a reunion of confederato and union | ¢ thirdof of thatstate | and player pel was laid in Beistol soldiers during the Col ian exposi- | pu up stakes: We donc would ma time to the close of his tion, but at firet thonght it would scem | k00w, but we think we could safely ass can republic started without distinetions of won T : e S B e e them, or shall a way be pro- soon thereafter vided to enable American boys to become competent chanics paticntly abide its comir vreaching in th privat THERE is plenty of tir n houses, whe g sorved the 1 1730 the founda stone of 1 first | of system of unrivaled excells Having | frin lization The state cntered the union with a s (e , 5 rich patrimony of public land, which petent, however, having just served two v',“‘l QAlNED Hes DOOVBUCH I QY MON i speedily became the a scho terms as mayor of Boston. Dhoppraicasibngilarofiorar vl £ fant while there isalways room at the top there are extremely few who huve the AFTER searching the records fromone | wiiiity to resch it. Women are con ond of the state to the other Detective | yanding for a place in all the lghier | o y n L Johneon, alins Denn and hall a dozen | clnsscs of employment, and with marked | CL18 OF race, and with a ‘constitution ning them ¢ tion is to celebrate what all peoplo agrec other alinses claims to have discovered | ¢\ ocoss. W hat that guaranteed eq privileges and | thom with iscrepancies in three precinets outside of Douglas county against the prohibi- tion amendment. This startling revel tion is immediately followed by anotier demand for a recount of the whole state. —_— no hisiory and no teadition there- fore, neither 10 &, the \em fu for all their possessions in that stat - ] to have been the important event K. ('8 Ghost o Chanc ing worker, in huma , th overy of . Now X whose powers and . € America, o ; ore he poeu- is ple 11150 she has ty. Ouo of imate, it is little wonder that | o seprate himsolf from \ e aelbn ahpatriatisml onheinn i o where who tind the fight for subsistence | ¢ 2 nas ind, and to th American citizons, since all pook wl rou oot k 7 he mighty tid wion that has i i ! hard and uncertain will attest, is 0 mo: & A L equally 1dentified o8t it swept neross the Missouri las riven wre the tens of thousands e 2 opportunities to all comers, With these of young men who every year step into % f nate conditions, t 0 hick 15t by the arena to battle for existenco todo if | A0 ; L vicl 2 a0 they are not permiited to learn useful | * 3 wpassed, W § liarly an occasion for the broadest e trades? The quostion, a8 men every- A1l the influ of onubly expected, w the SENATOR ( Vyoming ftesti- | sorious and imvortant one,and it is flod at the woman’s co in Wash- [ growing more so year by year. The vears and has become a model common- | whic Gohool 1o 0uea th . toth :‘.(-1 m;u " ',““ logical ¥ off i olosey i hLnr In | 1 the way for th withdrawa T R e of union, and it would seem that nothing ington thut female suffrage was a monu- | idea of establishing a trade mental succoss in his state. Of course, | Omaha should be oncou ! ; hies Senator Cavey would have hard sleddi hanl { pUtbiOEfis the state of N preser disconraged Where are tie would more likely 1t hereafter, in a state where women vote A BLOW AT MODERN BARBARISM, for members of the legislature, if he tos- tified 1o anything else. ie is about as unprejudiced a witness as a man who should testify in his own behalf whon on trial for his lifo. SUSAN B. ANTHONY and the fourth | ment houses, they work from duylight | has sslked fo > this will prevent | his ¢ ) 10 the place of party presidentinl candidate, Mrs. Belva [ 1o midnight in the manufacture of cheap | such an extension the educational | cupios among th pleasant pictur the world on her | palorganizati An i N S5 Y this than a reunion of tl There is a class of king men, wo- | 24th bivthaay L 2 Opposd the northern and southern armics, san By eting, with the whole worl ss it, ought to inspire in regarded srowning act of his life men und children in New York city — Chu whose condition justifies the phras EDUCATING THIE INDIAN, tho M funs generally estimate i the lust contury asonly second in - importance to the Lu tims of what is known as *“the sweator | appropriate as much for Indian schools | theran system.” Crowded into wretched tene- con oner of Indian affair modern barbarism. They are tho vie-| The present congress will not imgost feeling of patriotic rmation. The we il DR R et B0l et could, the abounding vitality aud power usidy 61 aily.of pino- ominence it ocs | of oup republican system i 5 5 SLtiade worl greatost v e A8juaYe provable Lockwood, will henceforth not speak as they puss. The plumeless knight of woman rights who has long since dis- clothing, and receive pay work of the bureau us is to be desired, | ligious leadoer house of the legi slature has pat proposi pittanco that barely sustains o precari- [ thero s reason to expect considerablo — W which enables county ous existenc What thoy sweat progress in the work during the year, LITERATI ) e 3 vded fashion’s foibles touched a most which, if realized, may have the effc Ther 20,000 1 f sitive chord vhen she declared at | Now York philanthopists have tri to induce the next congress to bo more | flavor, a landseaps 80,0 40 uaglio:s T the woman's national council that she | L] e S e e v ) or distinel v cha but when she went 50 far as to bleact lic, It now i el house of representat i, the middie B eyt E 4EARD N KA her bair and paint hor face, Susan folt | $ : y e AT A Bl 1t Titano LA i il herself bound to cut her acquaintanc country when hie said that | not produ mmo in need for cost, plus 10 per cen the gov 5 A the most effeetive remaody for Ind an enduring wo f fiction, no It 18 proposed to put reciprocity with | chusetts. ? 1p- | conflicts would be found in educating | of history or biog Brazil to a practical test by sending | pointed E 3 port | all of the Indians at the same time and | with the classios of other coun three Awmerican steamships o that coun- T E e f Darkest | in the same way, He urged that they | other ur own land, W try loaded with samples of almost ever En e k 1} life and acated in the English lan- | to the A i y of Boston capitalists are interested in | being worn away on the morelless g - | suits which will enabie them river and the Sier (el s i e Ably lins a b the scheme, which is said to have stone of poverty in the tenement cl wselves und provide for their fam The genius ofe Hawthorne has i : i ostor and surned large proportions. The design is | ing shops of New Yerk. [t demostrates | lies. In order to do this he would carry | mortalized the fearly legends of New i ’ ‘ sy k0 8 ¢ to start the expedition the latter part of | that the product of this miserable the schools to the Indic vd ot th Poats have made ity seener S . ke Aprilor early in May, and arrange- | is imprognated with the germs of con- | Indians to the schools, except in cases | * to uropenn eyes as Burns f 3 o SN ments are being made to rent storehouses | tazious diseases and is therefore dan- [ where an advanced cdueation is contem- | and Moore have made Scotlind’s and | Nubiaska, as it desery 0 o bt ‘ lide himsc in Rio for exhibiting the snmples, The orous to theoutside publie. It is proba- | plated. Our” public schools should be Ireland’ p American. His nisagood one and if carried out | ble that as a result of this investigation | the model for the Indian schools. The | torians and biographers have given its MINISTER BLAIR to the ewper to have very beneficial results, | Massnchuseits will forbid the shipment [ education of the Indian children should | annals as rich a " tting as the ¢ art usle ) tion a little measure for the cdusation - i An, t art | “Allow me to eall to yo atten with South America display samples of | tervitory, and thus strike a telling blow | as they arvive at school age should be | given to the story of the fall . 1of the i All European countrics having trade | of New York sweator clothing into her | not be done piecemeal, but altof them | masters of the old wo pioan goods in the principal commercial eiti at the manufacturers who pander to | given an opportunity to acquire an | the rise of the Dutch republic e misses national expense. 1f | ol 1 - an enlightened king like China 1 lsowl p MARCH DAYS, and in ordor to compete the m adopts it now u bonighted republic like their greed by employing sweater labor | education ana compelled to take | French revolution ers and merchants of the United States | and puying sweater vrices, advantage of it. To educate onc- | ters of fiction, like Louisa Aleott, must do the same. \e disposition | it is & humilinting veflection on our | fourth, or one-half, or three-fourths of | Elizabeth Staart — Phelps T R shown by the Boston merchants to take | eivilization that such a step should be | the Indian children, said Congressman | Sarah Ovone Jewett, havo portrayed its hold of the opportunity now offered in a | necessary, especially ina land where | Taylor, will not solve the problem or | soual life in wholesome novels thatull [ THE interuntional copyright | the United States may want to follow thoroughly business-like way is most | mott clusses of labor are well paid and | Iift the Indians above their dependence | the world has read. The sculptorand | provably be among the measures that commendable, and it is to be expected | where we legislate against the pauper | upon the government. It is doubtful if | the painter have preserved the form and | will fail to pass in the presont cor that their example will be emulated by | labor of other countries, Tt is also a | any great good will result from educat- | natures of its historic men | gress. The bill that went through the the merchants of other seaport cities, as | striking instance of the public spirit of | ing a part only of the Indian boys and In the last ton years the v pos= | house and was expeeted by its support it certainly will be should it prove asuc- | Massachusetts that she should go outside | girls if they are pormitted to veturn to [ sibilitios of the south have r ved | eo0ss, of her own domain to lift the crushing | their tribes, but if they are all educated | marked attention at the hands of pub- veral 3 portant to bo promptly passed by the senate, wi awarrant idea prevails abroad that